People Love Dead Jews : Reports from a Haunted Present
People Love Dead Jews : Reports from a Haunted Present
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Author(s): Horn, Dara
ISBN No.: 9781324035947
Pages: 168
Year: 202209
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 24.77
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Dara Horn proposes a disturbingly fresh reckoning with an ancient hatred, refusing all categories of victimhood and sentimentality. She offers a passionate display of the self-renewing vitality of Jewish belief and practice. Because antisemitism is a Christian problem more than a Jewish one, Christian readers need this book. It is urgently important.--James Carroll, author of The Truth at the Heart of the Lie Dara Horn''s thoughtful, incisive essays constitute a searing investigation of modern-day antisemitism, in all its disguises and complications. No matter where Horn casts her acute critical eye--from the ruins of the Jewish community in Harbin, China, to the tragedy at Pittsburgh''s Tree of Life synagogue--the reports she brings back are at once surprising and enlightening and necessary.--Ruth Franklin, author of Shirley Jackson and A Thousand Darknesses Dara Horn has an uncommon mastery of the literary essay, and she applies it here with a relentless, even furious purpose. Horn makes well-worn debates--on Anne Frank and Hannah Arendt, for instance--newly provocative and urgent.


Her best essays are by turns tragic and comic, and her magnificent mini biography of Varian Fry alone justifies paying the full hardcover price.--Tom Reiss, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, and the Real Count of Monte Cristo To see what is in front of one''s nose needs a constant struggle, George Orwell told us. Dara Horn has engaged that struggle, and in People Love Dead Jews she explains why so many prefer the mythologized, dead Jewish victim to the living Jew next door. It''s gripping, and stimulating, and it''s the best collection of essays I have read in a long, long time.--Mark Oppenheimer, author of Squirrel Hill: The Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting and the Soul of a Neighborhood Horn is clearly exhausted about thinking about dead Jews, and about antisemitism, and you can feel her emotion through the page. But she channels the emotion to weave together a large amount of stories -- from Russian Jews living in China to Daf Yomi -- and what results is a compelling series of essays.--Emily Burack, Alma People Love Dead Jews is, of all things, a deeply entertaining book, from its whopper of a title on. Horn''s sarcasm is bracing, reminding us that the politics of Jewish memory often becomes an outrageous marketing of half-truths and outright lies.


People Love Dead Jews reminds us that Jewishness is not a museum, a graveyard, or a heritage site but a lively ongoing conversation at a long table that stretches before and behind us. Come out of hiding, Horn urges us, it''s time to take part in Jewish life.--David Mikics, Tablet Weav­ing togeth­er his­to­ry, social sci­ence, and per­son­al sto­ry, she asks read­ers to think crit­i­cal­ly about why we ven­er­ate sto­ries and spaces that make the destruc­tion of world Jew­ry a com­pelling nar­ra­tive while also min­i­miz­ing the cur­rent cri­sis of anti­semitism. Peo­ple Love Dead Jews offers no defin­i­tive solu­tion to the para­dox it unfolds. Horn leaves the read­er with sev­er­al inter­wo­ven expla­na­tions, each of which lead us to con­front the dark real­i­ty that Jew­ish deaths make for a com­pelling edu­ca­tion­al nar­ra­tive, while fac­ing the anti­semitism of the present demands a com­mit­ment to equal­i­ty that the world remains unable to embrace.--Jonathan Fass, Jewish Book Council How can a book filled with anger, a book about anti-Semitism and entitled People Love Dead Jews , be delectable at the same time? The novelist Dara Horn has done it, combining previously published pieces in a work that is far greater than the sum of its parts.--Elliot Abrams, Commentary Horn herself [is] sometimes a witness, at others providing insightful commentary full of anguish and rage. This is not an easy book to read.


But wrestling with Horn''s ideas makes for a rich experience. In all, a profound lament.--Ilene Cooper, Booklist This is a beautiful book, and in its particular genre--nonfiction meditations on the murder of Jews, particularly in the Holocaust, and the place of the dead in the American imagination--it can have few rivals. In fact, I can''t think of any.--Martin Peretz, Wall Street Journal The questions and ideas raised by Horn in People Love Dead Jews are -- like the Yiddish stories she writes about -- endless and defiant of neat solutions. But there is comfort to be found, in the most Jewish ways, in her humour and clear-eyed critical thinking.--Keren David, The Jewish Chronicle "So necessary and so disquieting. People Love Dead Jews is an outstanding book with a bold mission.


It criticizes people, artworks, and public institutions that few others dare to challenge."--Yaniv Iczkovits, New York Times Book Review Extremely engaging. Horn will make you think.--Jeffrey Salkin, Washington Post.


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